|
I am in desperate need of a snare wire for my Ludwig WFL snare. The original has disintegrated and everywhere I look online they've got the 3-screw mount, but not the string mount. The model I need is PLS-1416. Do you guys have any decent resources for this hard-to-find stuff?
|
# ? Sep 4, 2013 00:52 |
|
|
# ? May 13, 2024 09:58 |
|
scuz posted:I am in desperate need of a snare wire for my Ludwig WFL snare. The original has disintegrated and everywhere I look online they've got the 3-screw mount, but not the string mount. The model I need is PLS-1416. Do you guys have any decent resources for this hard-to-find stuff? Yeah, find a local shop in your area, preferably one that is a licensed Ludwig retailer and they should be able to put in an order to Ludwig for it. I'm actually waiting on my local dealer to get some tom mount gaskets as the factory ones are shot and now the floor tom legs are touching the hoops causing a really irritating buzzing sound. You can't get anything direct from Ludwig as they aren't capable of just straight up charging you though, which sucks.
|
# ? Sep 4, 2013 04:38 |
|
I Might Be Adam posted:Yeah, find a local shop in your area, preferably one that is a licensed Ludwig retailer and they should be able to put in an order to Ludwig for it. I'm actually waiting on my local dealer to get some tom mount gaskets as the factory ones are shot and now the floor tom legs are touching the hoops causing a really irritating buzzing sound. You can't get anything direct from Ludwig as they aren't capable of just straight up charging you though, which sucks. In funny news I ran across this when perusing for used hardware: http://minneapolis.craigslist.org/hnp/msg/4046596803.html Also this pawn shop is good for some laughs: http://minneapolis.craigslist.org/hnp/msd/3974401212.html scuz fucked around with this message at 01:15 on Sep 5, 2013 |
# ? Sep 5, 2013 00:43 |
|
I've been playing drums for around 15 years, and I'm shopping for a new set. Willing to spare around 1000 for a shell pack. I play mostly hardcore, punk, and ska. Bit of metal. Any ideas for a new kit? It's hard to shop for a new kit, so many options. Thanks
|
# ? Sep 5, 2013 02:46 |
|
hunter x az posted:I've been playing drums for around 15 years, and I'm shopping for a new set. Willing to spare around 1000 for a shell pack. I play mostly hardcore, punk, and ska. Bit of metal. Any ideas for a new kit? It's hard to shop for a new kit, so many options. Thanks Really going to depend on what kind of wood and drum size/number configuration. I dropped around that on a kick/rack/floor/snare configuration and I waited until it was on sale. Even though I don't have the kit anymore, my old Yamaha Stage Custom was a pretty fantastic kit that I played for almost 15 yrs. That kit took such a beating and still sounded great for what was essentially an entry level kit back in 1996. Currently playing a Ludwig kit with no real complaints. Edit: That post for the 20" floor tom is awesome. I Might Be Adam fucked around with this message at 03:16 on Sep 5, 2013 |
# ? Sep 5, 2013 03:14 |
|
That's one of the better Craigslist postings overall that I've ever seen selling gear.
|
# ? Sep 5, 2013 03:19 |
|
Okay, I'm new to drumming and all that jazz, so I started taking lessons. My instructor, based on my goals for wanting to be the drummer for this band has advised that I work on my double-stroke rolls. She says it'll increase my speed. However I'm not 100% on whether I'm practicing this correctly. She has advised that I use my wrists as little as possible and to try and use my fingers as much as I can, but that's giving me some problems. Any double-stroke roll techniques for a new drummer guy?
|
# ? Sep 6, 2013 06:18 |
|
scuz posted:Okay, I'm new to drumming and all that jazz, so I started taking lessons. My instructor, based on my goals for wanting to be the drummer for this band has advised that I work on my double-stroke rolls. She says it'll increase my speed. However I'm not 100% on whether I'm practicing this correctly. She has advised that I use my wrists as little as possible and to try and use my fingers as much as I can, but that's giving me some problems. Any double-stroke roll techniques for a new drummer guy? Yeah, first make sure you're gripping the stick correctly (relaxed, thumb and forefinger, etc.) and try to get the drumstick to move without bending your wrist. It should be similar to the motion for ringing a bell on a bike or a "come hither" hand motion. Beyond that, start slow and make sure your technique is good. You can go as slow as you need to but don't speed up until you have it down. The rest of it is just getting a feel for how your sticks and drums respond. Eventually you'll get a feel for the recoil from striking the drum; that's going to be essential to speed. Instead of bringing your wrist down twice for the double stroke, you bring it down once, the stick bounces up, and you bring it back down with your fingers instead of your wrist. Then you switch hands. You just have to practice until it feels right.
|
# ? Sep 6, 2013 06:54 |
|
I bought a cajon (Gon Bops Alex Acuna) a few months ago as my first percussion instrument (born and raised guitar player) and I'm having a blast being able to take my "drumming fingers on a tabletop" skills and making it sound like something useful. I'm kicking around the idea of getting a mini cajon like the Schlagwerk Cajonito or the Meinl travel cajon for messing around while laying on the couch or using the computer or whatever. Does anyone have any experience or suggestions on such matters?
|
# ? Sep 7, 2013 07:26 |
|
Picked up a new drum kit for 900$ bucks after tax, after selling mine about 6 months ago due to finances. PDP Concept Maple 7-piece kit. I bought a snare stand, had an old boom stand, picked up some Mapex double pedals, and need a throne. Also bought the Meinl HCS starter kit, 14" hi-hats, 16" crash, 20" ride and 2 stands and a hi-hat stand from eBay. Excited to start playing again.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2013 01:42 |
|
Declan MacManus posted:Yeah, first make sure you're gripping the stick correctly (relaxed, thumb and forefinger, etc.) and try to get the drumstick to move without bending your wrist. It should be similar to the motion for ringing a bell on a bike or a "come hither" hand motion. Beyond that, start slow and make sure your technique is good. You can go as slow as you need to but don't speed up until you have it down. The rest of it is just getting a feel for how your sticks and drums respond. Eventually you'll get a feel for the recoil from striking the drum; that's going to be essential to speed. Instead of bringing your wrist down twice for the double stroke, you bring it down once, the stick bounces up, and you bring it back down with your fingers instead of your wrist. Then you switch hands. You just have to practice until it feels right. Thanks dude, this helped a ton! I hadn't been using my fingers the proper way before.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2013 06:01 |
|
scuz posted:Thanks dude, this helped a ton! I hadn't been using my fingers the proper way before. It's the only really efficient way to build speed with matched sticking. If you stick with it you'll eventually be able to do hits with each individual finger and then oh man Well, not the only way I guess http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QFZfOLbnBwI
|
# ? Sep 8, 2013 23:47 |
|
Declan MacManus posted:It's the only really efficient way to build speed with matched sticking. If you stick with it you'll eventually be able to do hits with each individual finger and then oh man mmmmmmmmmff just got done doing double-stroke rolls at 120 for 4 straight minutes and man, do I feel awesome.
|
# ? Sep 10, 2013 06:06 |
|
The official response from D'Addario/PureSound, by the way, was that they are never making that snare wire ever again. And also to gently caress myself (the rep was a little rude). Time for some custom work!
|
# ? Sep 10, 2013 23:35 |
|
scuz posted:mmmmmmmmmff just got done doing double-stroke rolls at 120 for 4 straight minutes and man, do I feel awesome. What's your note base? 8th-notes? 16th? Not sure what your playing experience is, but for someone who's just starting to get a feel for double stroke hand motion, I don't think diving straight into 4-minute rolls is the way to go. If you're getting a clean, even sound while staying relaxed, that's great, then no worries. But just playing a double stroke roll for a long period of time doesn't help much with musicality. To me, a lot of drumming is about transitions between different tempos, rhythms, and sticking patterns - can you play those double stroke rolls for four minutes while going from piano to forte in one clean dynamic movement? See, that would be more impressive and more musical than straight double strokes. I can understand the idea of doing it for endurance, but I'm not a big fan of that school of thought as it implies that you need to have a certain 'toughness' in order to pull off a feat like that. One drumline used to do like iron man double strokes competitions, to see who can play double strokes the longest. It may be fun, but I don't think you can expect anything from that except maybe carpel tunnel. Relaxed playing and playing clean and with musicality to me is more important - tension ruins everything.
|
# ? Sep 11, 2013 05:26 |
|
Four minutes isn't exactly a marathon length to be doing a single rudiment though, I have seen mentioned plenty of times that for effective muscle memory retention you need to practice something for at least 3 minutes straight otherwise you won't get the full benefits. Sometimes when watching a show or something I will do a specific rudiment without tempo or dynamics change for the full 40 minutes, obviously not at a rate that causes pain or discomfort, and this has given me a great foundation to apply it musically around the kit because I can bust out double or diddles or whatever at any point without conscious thought. I subscribe to the "if it hurts, stop doing it" school of practice, otherwise everything is fair game.
|
# ? Sep 11, 2013 05:45 |
|
Kodo posted:What's your note base? 8th-notes? 16th? Not sure what your playing experience is, but for someone who's just starting to get a feel for double stroke hand motion, I don't think diving straight into 4-minute rolls is the way to go. If you're getting a clean, even sound while staying relaxed, that's great, then no worries. But just playing a double stroke roll for a long period of time doesn't help much with musicality. To me, a lot of drumming is about transitions between different tempos, rhythms, and sticking patterns - can you play those double stroke rolls for four minutes while going from piano to forte in one clean dynamic movement? See, that would be more impressive and more musical than straight double strokes.
Edit: Just now I spent 3 hours looking for a suitable replacement snare wire for my snare. Never give up, never surrender. scuz fucked around with this message at 06:42 on Sep 11, 2013 |
# ? Sep 11, 2013 06:13 |
|
scuz posted:
cool, wasn't sure how I should have phrased my post, so apologies for any misunderstanding. RandomCheese, do you have a source for that three-minute figure for muscle memory? It would be interesting to see the full scope of that particular argument.
|
# ? Sep 11, 2013 15:17 |
|
Feel kinda like I should make myself a training schedule or something, like do rudiments an hour for a day and then work with a metronome the next or something, try to get as much out of this "practice pad" as I can until I get a real set. An hour might be a little to much though, maybe 30 minutes every day. Just hitting this one thing over and over will probably get boring real quick.
|
# ? Sep 11, 2013 16:39 |
|
So I found these pictures during my sleepless quest for snare wire: The drum in this picture is the drum that I have: http://vintagedrumguide.com/images/snare_applications/wfl_pl-1416/wfl_pl-1416.html Here's a picture of the PL3-1416 in action: http://vintagedrumguide.com/images/snare_applications/wfl_pl3-1416/wfl_pl3-1416.html Hopefully this means I'll just need to find one of a similar length and modify it. Meh! Kodo posted:cool, wasn't sure how I should have phrased my post, so apologies for any misunderstanding.
|
# ? Sep 12, 2013 00:05 |
|
Stupid noob question ahoy! I want to start drumming and all the information and tips in this thread are just fantastically motivating and helpful. The question: I'm left-handed, so does this mean that I should set the kit up in a particular way? Is there a convention that dictates lefties put the hi-hat on the opposite side to right-handed drummers and if so, which side is that? Alternatively, do you just experiment and set things up whichever way works best for you. I guess I'm trying to find out if there is a way of setting up that encourages best practice and technique, plus enables faster learning.
|
# ? Oct 13, 2013 20:58 |
|
You should try it both ways and use whichever way is most natural. There are plenty of left-handed folks out there who play drums right-handed and others who play left-handed; there's no right or wrong way.
|
# ? Oct 13, 2013 22:32 |
|
Frazzbo posted:Stupid noob question ahoy! I want to start drumming and all the information and tips in this thread are just fantastically motivating and helpful. The question: I'm left-handed, so does this mean that I should set the kit up in a particular way? Is there a convention that dictates lefties put the hi-hat on the opposite side to right-handed drummers and if so, which side is that? Alternatively, do you just experiment and set things up whichever way works best for you. I guess I'm trying to find out if there is a way of setting up that encourages best practice and technique, plus enables faster learning. Most lefties prefer the hat on the right side of the kit, OR I've seen them play on the left with their left hand. I've also seen the ride on the left in that set up. It's really all about how you feel comfortable.
|
# ? Oct 13, 2013 22:38 |
|
Frazzbo posted:Stupid noob question ahoy! I want to start drumming and all the information and tips in this thread are just fantastically motivating and helpful. The question: I'm left-handed, so does this mean that I should set the kit up in a particular way? Is there a convention that dictates lefties put the hi-hat on the opposite side to right-handed drummers and if so, which side is that? Alternatively, do you just experiment and set things up whichever way works best for you. I guess I'm trying to find out if there is a way of setting up that encourages best practice and technique, plus enables faster learning. I still remember when I first started playing I had no idea how to setup a kit and just decided to place the hi-hat on the right side (I'm right-handed). A musician friend made fun of me so I switched the hi-hat to the left side It's a comfort thing, but it's not only that - playing in an open position (no arm crossing) opens up the drum set to a wide array of possibilities. But that's not an argument you hear often unless you play jazz where some argue that moving the right arm over to the ride changed drumming forever because you weren't "hindered" by the cross-arm position and have more freedom with sticking (I think it was an interview with Jimmy Cobb or Billy Hart, can't remember). Anyway, it shouldn't be something you need to worry about. Putting your HH on the right side (pun not intended) will get you paid/laid 99% of the time. Kodo fucked around with this message at 04:13 on Oct 14, 2013 |
# ? Oct 14, 2013 04:09 |
|
One benefit of learning to play with hats on the left will be that it's easier to play someone elses kit, whether it be at lessons or shared equipment at a gig, without doing major adjustments before you sit down.
|
# ? Oct 14, 2013 04:26 |
|
RandomCheese posted:One benefit of learning to play with hats on the left will be that it's easier to play someone elses kit, whether it be at lessons or shared equipment at a gig, without doing major adjustments before you sit down. yeah, that's an excellent point - unless you see yourself around your own kit, getting used to playing a right-handed setup will be useful.
|
# ? Oct 14, 2013 05:56 |
|
The more important part for starting out is your hand/arm/leg coordination and ultimately independance. If you get your sticking down, and your arms and legs coordinated then independant of each other, it wont really matter how your setup is. This is probably a ways away from where your at, however, so don't worry too much and just keep playing in whatever way you can and developing good habits and skills.
|
# ? Oct 14, 2013 16:04 |
|
All good stuff guys, thanks again! Now all I need to do is get meself a kit... Where's that piggy bank gone?
|
# ? Oct 14, 2013 21:25 |
|
After much searching, I finally took the plunge and upgraded my ride cymbal from a Zildjian 21" K Crash/Ride to a Zildjian 22" K Ride. I mostly play rock, jazzish stuff and americana so I was looking for a dryer cymbal with less wash. I love the tone and dynamic of this new ride but still dealing with a bit too much wash/decay on the cymbal. I did look at the K Custom Dry/Dark rides but felt that a lot of them just didn't have enough wash or they had an unpleasant hum once you got it going. I guess my question is, does anyone have suggestions for dampening? I know you can use gaffer tape but I'm not keen on gunking up the underside of the cymbal with adhesive. I found that the cymbal sounded almost perfect when applying a finger to the underside edge of the cymbal. It cut just the right amount of decay out of it.
|
# ? Oct 15, 2013 15:55 |
|
Sounds like you need an extra finger
|
# ? Oct 15, 2013 16:02 |
|
I Might Be Adam posted:After much searching, I finally took the plunge and upgraded my ride cymbal from a Zildjian 21" K Crash/Ride to a Zildjian 22" K Ride. I mostly play rock, jazzish stuff and americana so I was looking for a dryer cymbal with less wash. I love the tone and dynamic of this new ride but still dealing with a bit too much wash/decay on the cymbal. I did look at the K Custom Dry/Dark rides but felt that a lot of them just didn't have enough wash or they had an unpleasant hum once you got it going. Moon gel. Moon gel is manna from heaven. Easily removable and leaves zero residue. can be used to dampen anything.
|
# ? Oct 15, 2013 17:39 |
|
Picked up some moon gels and will try them tonight before rehearsal. Thanks for the advice and recommendation.
|
# ? Oct 15, 2013 22:23 |
|
So I moved my drums into a practice space so I can actually hear them for the first time. The tom, I was told, is a 3-ply maple Slingerland that, I was told, would sound great with my drums, and it sure does. The hi-hats are a KZ pair that I picked up from eBay and that snare, now that it has a snare wire, is so much fun to smack around. The first night I set it up I practiced for not quite 3 hours. Drumming rules, you guys.
|
# ? Oct 15, 2013 23:25 |
|
Going back to that hi-hat side stuff for just a second, would it be a good idea it switch my kit to a left handed set-up if I want to work getting my hands more independent? Basically I've got pretty good syncopation abilities with my left hand at the moment, as well as nice stick control for double and multiple bounce rolls and all that jazz. But my right hand is pretty poo poo at it, as is my left hand at keeping a consistent pattern going if the left hand tries to dick around. I suppose I can guess that it would certainly work for what I want, but does it seem like the benefits of the extra work re-arranging my kit will pay off? In addition, despite being a right handed person, my ability to start rolls with my right hand is pretty lacking. I guess I've kind of answered my own question, but I still want to know what other advantages there would be switching up the handedness of my kit. e: thankee VVVVVVVVV CARRIERHASARRIVED fucked around with this message at 06:04 on Oct 18, 2013 |
# ? Oct 16, 2013 04:14 |
|
Personally, I wouldn't go through the hassle of rearranging my kit since then I couldn't just sit down and do fun stuff as easily. The book "New Breed" has some pretty groovy exercises to help with exactly that situation, though. I'll post a couple when I get out of class.
|
# ? Oct 16, 2013 16:40 |
|
So instead of rearranging your kit, you can play a simple pattern like this with your off hand (or primary!): and then have your other hand play a "melody" like this: eventually working up to this silliness: I scanned a page of patterns and a few more of melodies if anyone's interested in it (sorry for the bad cutoffs on a few) https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/2284/SA/New%20Breed%20stuff.pdf edit: To add a question of my own, I recently realized that I accidentally messed up my sight reading somewhere along the way. What I do right now is learn whatever I'm reading well enough that I can glance at it and play it from memory. How do I fix it so I can actually sight read stuff? Jazz Marimba fucked around with this message at 20:41 on Oct 16, 2013 |
# ? Oct 16, 2013 19:37 |
|
Jazz Marimba posted:edit: To add a question of my own, I recently realized that I accidentally messed up my sight reading somewhere along the way. What I do right now is learn whatever I'm reading well enough that I can glance at it and play it from memory. How do I fix it so I can actually sight read stuff? The way I did it was to get/borrow a ton of music and never read anything more than once or twice. I came out of a season of drum corps being able to memorize anything in seconds, and that's how my teacher at the time ended up forcing me to improve my reading.
|
# ? Oct 18, 2013 03:19 |
|
you ate my cat posted:The way I did it was to get/borrow a ton of music and never read anything more than once or twice. I came out of a season of drum corps being able to memorize anything in seconds, and that's how my teacher at the time ended up forcing me to improve my reading. ...do you have a ton of sheet music I could borrow? And is there any sort of progression you recommend, or just "the order in which you pick them up?"
|
# ? Oct 18, 2013 03:27 |
|
Jazz Marimba posted:...do you have a ton of sheet music I could borrow? And is there any sort of progression you recommend, or just "the order in which you pick them up?" Yeah the amount of music is the tough part. I was fortunate enough to have access to a couple filing cabinets full of stuff. What kind of reading are you looking to do? And what level? I did a bunch of mallet reading out of Bona's Rhythmical Articulation, and just kind of cycled through in the hopes I forgot what I'd read a few weeks before. Rhythm reading, you can read just about anything though some instruments are more useful than others. Do you have access to a library with a music section? Can be a surprising number of older method books in there. If you want to read, say, timpani stuff, then we might be in trouble.
|
# ? Oct 18, 2013 03:48 |
|
|
# ? May 13, 2024 09:58 |
|
I don't know much bout models etc, but what brand are these in the first picture? http://minneapolis.craigslist.org/dak/msg/4136102010.html I'm intrigued, mostly cuz $80 for a floor and rack tom, and a bass drum.
|
# ? Oct 18, 2013 06:30 |